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How to create a Wedding Day Timeline

How to create a relaxed Wedding Day timeline, paced to perfection…

Tips on pacing your big day to perfection…

Everyone says it, your wedding day will pass by in a flash. But with careful planning and a well-advised timeline, you can make time to ‘be in the moment’ and soak it all in, without worrying about what’s happening next.

Relaxed brides and grooms are a top priority for the team at Suffolk wedding venue, Butley Priory. That’s why our first planning meeting is spent establishing that all-important timeline - and here’s where you’ll tell us all your ideas.

We’ve helped couples bring all kinds of ideas to fruition. From ring-bearing pups to exchanging vows over Baby Guinness shots.

Every wedding is unique and each couple has different priorities, but most follow a similar format with four distinct parts:

1. Pre-ceremony

2. Ceremony

3. Drinks & dinner

4. Evening

Here’s how to plan your wedding day timeline

  1. Set a time for your wedding ceremony

    Let’s start things off with your ceremony time. From here, you can work backwards and then forwards to create a timeline for the rest of the day. When thinking about a time for your wedding ceremony you should consider things like good daylight for photos, restrictions within the venue, having enough time for the wedding party to get ready etc.

  2. Allocate minutes to each part of the day

    To do this, we need to be clear on how long each part of the wedding day takes. Creating a minute-by-minute schedule isn’t going to be helpful, but you’ll want to know approximately how long each part takes. The below timings give an idea, based on our experience.

3. For a church wedding, plan how to get from the ceremony to the reception venue

However long you think it will take, double it. Moving guests from A to B always takes longer than planned!

Talk to your photographer about allocating time for some formal photos at the church before setting off for the venue.

Let’s put it into practice, here is a sample timeline:

 

Let’s put it into practice, here is a sample timeline:

  • 1:00pm - ceremony

  • 1:30pm - confetti line

  • 1:45pm - service of drinks & canapes

  • 3:30pm - call for dinner

  • (Here, we include 15 mins for guests to move from A to B)

  • 3:45pm - service of wedding breakfast

  • 5:45pm - speeches

  • 6:15pm - socialising

  • 7:00pm - cutting the cake followed by the first dance

 

4. Plan your evening reception

For the evening reception, you’ll be pleased to know there aren’t too many timings to think about. This is part of the wedding day where you can truly let your hair down!

 
  • 6:15pm - Socialising and cocktails

  • 6:45pm - DJ/Band plays background music

  • 7:00pm - Evening guests arrive

  • 7:30pm - Cake cutting, straight into first dance & band plays first set

  • 9:00pm - Evening food

  • 10:00pm - Band second set

  • 11:45pm - Sparkler exit

  • Midnight - Carriages

 

5. Tell everybody else the plan…

Now that you have your timings organised from the ceremony through to the end of the night, let other key members of your wedding party and suppliers know what’s happening and when. This will save endless questions on the day itself and it will help others to feel prepared and ready to celebrate your day!

https://mcgivernphotography.com/

Butley Priory is an enchanting wedding venue set in the Suffolk countryside, just two hours from London, UK. Hosting a varied style of wedding, from romantic elopements, to intimate weddings and lavish marquee weddings, our team will ensure your wedding day is fabulous from start to finish!

To find out more about hosting your wedding at Butley Priory, contact the team!

With thanks, Photography Credits:

Joasis Photography, Laura Williams Photography, McGivern Photography, Irene Yap Weddings, Images by Anna, Emily & Steve

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May News

May news from Butley Priory

It’s been a busy last month –  starting with our first wedding; Becky and Paul were married in April. Everything went smoothly, the sun shone, only a minor hitch, where was our wedding license? With our refurbishment (including old office turned into a staff cloakroom, and Covid clamp down) it hadn’t been seen or required for some while. We kept our heads. All was well; of course it was filed in the right place all along.

We’ve restocked the Pilgrims Bar, our speciality gin bar, in the tiny vaulted room with an open fire where the monks once dispensed alms to the poor. The “piscina” - an arch with a stone basin for holy water, is from the original monastery. It’s been a entertaining, sampling some of the brands, some seriously curious flavours – Parma Violet for one. We like the Juniper with orange peel. My favourite has to be Chase Hedgerow Elderflower with soda and lemon.  Fishers Gin might be pricey but their new “Smoked” brand is delicious especially with ginger ale and lime, savour every mouthful.

Coes of Ipswich did a fashion shoot in the Priory and gardens. Look out for the pictures on their website and on our instagram.

We have a wedding shoot next week. A team of local wedding suppliers have come together to showcase Suffolk’s best talent. Organised by make up artist Victoria Bradfield. Ayshea Goldberg is doing the photography, Videographer Aaron from Avisuals is filming, wedding gowns are from The Bridal Lounge, hair by Lynette Chasmer, flowers by Charlotte Staff (creams, white, lilacs and pinks), stationery (exquisite calligraphy) by Polly Pickel Design,  a sumptuous wedding cake by Luca’s Cakes, Jewellery by Susannah Chenevix (pearls are the theme) and pulled together by wedding planner Louisa May Weddings.

A makeup artist turned up today for a wedding – but wrong venue – panic stations all round. But she made it to the right venue in the nick of time. First guests in the farmhouse went swimmingly, we liked it that they were keen to compost their veggie waste. NB compost area behind the garden shed (bottom of the garden). The tennis court is finally painted (the day that it finally rained after seven dry weeks), two shades of green. Plays like a dream.

The Tudor Room four-poster curtains are completed, Rose fabric lined with pink ticking from The Cloth Shop in the Portobello Road. The white lattice mango wood chest and raspberry coloured floral rug are from Snape Malting, lamps and candy striped pink shades are Pooky Lighting, pretty lime washed table from Marlesford Mill (where we have found many treasures), the recycled plastic carpet (looks like sisal and soft underfoot) is from the Unnatural Flooring Company.

After hours of searching the Internet in lockdown for a beautiful rug finally found one from Oka for the Mary Rose room; subtle soft pinks and beige, and looks perfect. The day beds sourced for the Mary Rose and de Glanville (for extra small, or indeed larger guests) work a treat. The rooms are painted Dulux Ochre White and look fresh and serene – thank you Georgia Mann Interiors.

Kim the stone mason is back repairing a Priory buttress. Wallflowers high up in the ancient flint walls have taken root, rather a shame to dislodge them. Baz is hard at work in the gardens at Butley Abbey farmhouse, repairing the steps down to the summerhouse lawn. Isla is planning the flowers for her wedding in June, our first bride to be using the thatched summer house, with a marquee on the lawn.

We discovered to our excitement David Gillingwater who is creating our smart new signage (green and gold) is a piper! So if you are of Scottish heritage or a bagpipe enthusiast  - book him for your wedding. Scotland the Brave, Amazing Grace, Sky Boat Song and, Mairi’s Wedding are just a few favourites from his repertoire.

Should the heavens open or the bride wish to be driven from the Priory to Butley Church or Butley Abbey Farmhouse, vintage car enthusiasts might like our dark green 1954 Bentley, handsome in white ribbons, or for a more rustic vibe a 1955 Series 1 Land Rover.  However, the latter is in the last stages of restoration (ten years and counting), the radiator is finally sourced, we are ever hopeful we will see it shortly, gleaming and engine ticking over.   

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MID APRIL NEWS

April news from Butley Priory

MID APRIL NEWS

Our first wedding this year! Becky and Paul tie the knot on Wednesday 21st April with 15 guests. The Priory is looking stunning, painted, primed and as near perfect as possible for a building that is over 700 years old. The bedrooms are ready, the magnificent new curtains hung (thank you Jennie and Jean), the four-poster bed romantically draped, cushions plumped, new carpets, and rugs on the painted wooden floors. The new freestanding baths gleam. We are a little breathless about the kitchen, where is the new range cooker? Will it arrive in time for chef Peter Harrison? 

We are waiting for the frosts to pass before we plant up the terracotta tubs with wedding-white geraniums. The daffodils and primroses are giving way to bluebells. Our newly planted flowerbeds look good, alas, the Muntjac think so too.

Our holiday lets in The Priory, Butley Abbey Farmhouse and Gate Keepers Cottage in between weddings are filling up fast, but we have a few gaps. Book with us on our website www.butleypriory.co.uk or 07539 744366

GOURMET SUFFOLK

If you are planning a self-catering holiday in one of our beautiful properties, you are spoilt for choice with some wonderful local suppliers, right on the doorstep. Orford is the closest place for shopping, 15 minutes by car or take the foot ferry with your bicycle (roomy panniers essential) across Butley Creek.  Saturday morning is the Farmers Market in the Town Hall; get there early for the lobsters and crab rush, and trestle tables laden with homemade cakes, quiches, local honey, jams and chutney. Its good for preset buying too - pretty knitted baby things and exquisite turned wood salad bowls.

Pinney’s of Orford

www,pinneysoforford.co.uk

Shop 01394 450210 / Restaurant 01394 450277

Pinney’s is an institution in Orford. Four generations of the Pinney family have lived and worked at Butley Creek, harvesting oysters and smoking fish by the ancient river walls that keep the sea at bay. Their quayside shop  (and website) offers a mouth-watering range of seafood delicacies, oysters, succulent brown shrimps, smoked and fresh fish. The family run restaurant the “Butley Orford Oysterage” (angels on horseback and the fish pie highly recommended) is in the village square – booking essential. An exciting venture for this summer is the mobile horsebox, selling oysters and fishy treats, which can also be booked for private parties

Pump Street Bakery, Orford  -

www.pumpstreetchocolate.com / 01394 459829

Family run the Pump Street Bakery is another Orford household name. The smell of fresh baking and coffee alone entices you to join the queue. Sourdough, orange cinnamon swirls, oozing jam doughnuts (got a mention at the Oscars), Eccles cakes - the best in the land - and don’t forget the chocolate (try the sourdough and sea salt). At peak times there is a queue around the block, but always good for a chat with the locals: fishermen and the Sudbourne cricketers queuing up along with the visitors. Good plan to order in advance or use the home delivery service.

Fen Farm Dairy, Bungay 

www,fenfarmdairy.co.uk / 01986 892350

Raw Milk, creamy rich Baron Bigod cheese, velvety Skyr yogurt, deep yellow Bungay butter and tubs of silky mascarpone come from the raw milk of the Montbeliarde girls. This ancient breed comes originally from the Jura Alps; their milk is renown in France for Comte, Vacherin Mont d’Or and Reblochon cheese. The Fen Farm girls graze peacefully in the lush meadows of Waveney River Valley near Bungay.  Three generations of the welcoming Crickmore family run the farm and farm shop (which never seems to close). Orford village shop (sells everything imaginable from dog food to fresh deli stuff) stocks their products or order on the Fen Farm website.

Fishers Gin, Aldeburgh

www,fishersgin.com / 01728 454201

Gin made from “Local herbs and coastal botanics, capturing wild and forgotten flavours of the English coastline” sounds pretty irresistible with a splash of tonic and wedge of lime on a warm summers day. Andrew Heald was inspired by the salt marshland and the meadows where he grew up. He experimented with juniper, cardamom, caraway and fennel seeds, orange and lemon peel, samphire, bog myrtle, spignel and wild angelica, until he came up with the perfect blends, and launched Fishers Original in 2016.  This month ‘Fishers Smoked’ is launched, their third brand in collaboration with Pinney’s. Sacks of botanics have been infused using the smokery at Pinney’s, giving it a very pleasing smoky flavour – and yes a hint of fish, but it really works! Especially when the temperature drops and you are tucked up in front of a log fire.  Try it with ginger ale, a Moscow Mule with a difference. Take a distillery tour around their ultra chic seaside premises, followed by a tasting on the deck, a skip from the North Sea.  Book online or telephone, £30 a person (starting mid-May). 

High House Farm, Iken

www.highhousefarm.co.uk / 01394 450263;

Overlooking the marshes and sea tucked away between Subourne and Iken, Suvi and Piers Pool own this lovely fruit farm, which has been in the family since 1958.  ‘Pick your own’, or for lazy or in-a-hurry customers, there is of course a farm shop. The spring season starts with rhubarb and asparagus, followed by the soft fruits; gooseberries, raspberries, loganberries and currants, then as summer heats up, the cherries and plums ripen. Autumn brings the apples: Cox, Russet, James Grieve, Worcester, Ribston Pickle, Blenheim Orange to name a few.  If you are picking, best to call on the day to see what’s available. The shop sells, fruit (and frozen), four varieties of their own apple juice, scrumptious jams, local honey and Suffolk’s sensational B Chocolates.

B Chocolates

www,bchocolates.co.uk

Made at High House Farm, award-wining confectionnaire Anna McCreadie (Suvi’s sister) makes chocolate by hand using local raw honey from coastal beekeepers. Much in demand with the local shops, Anna also sells directly on her website.  Everyone’s favourite is the Honey & Sea Salt Caramels, but that’s just the tip of the iceberg:  dark truffle honey, honey and gingerbread truffles, honey and saffron caramels and delicious honeycomb thins. All packaged in beautiful pale brown boxes tied with twine. Anna also makes bespoke selections for wedding favours.

Wild Meat Company, Lime Tree Farm, Blaxhall

www,wildmeat.co.uk / 01728 687627

There’s a treat in store for carnivores near Blaxhall. Local organic meat and game, including, free range Sutton Hoo chicken, pheasant, hare, venison, pigeon, duck, partridge, game pie mix and it has to be said, the occasional squirrel. Succulent sausage rolls too. Their website supplies mouth-watering recipes. Try slow-cooked lamb infused with Earl Grey tea, rosemary, thyme and honey, roast partridge cooked on a bed of carrot, parsnip, and rhubarb, Papparedell (wide pasta) with a very slow cooked ragout of hare, marinated in red wine, rosemary, celery, juniper berries, or pan-fried pheasant with harissa, chicory and orange which gives a smoky Moroccan flavour. Buy online, next day delivery, or collect your order (NB. almost impossible to find). A helpful clue: it’s not far from one of our favourite pubs The Ship.

Adnams

www,adnams.co.uk

No introduction is required for the award-winning brewers Adnams, another Suffolk institution. Copper House in Southold is HQ where, vodka, gin and whisky are produced in their sustainable, state of art distillery (tours available). An array of lagers, ale and alcohol free beers with dazzling names such as Ghost Ship, Lighthouse, Wild Wave, Kobold and Wild hop.  We love their cider, iced cold for a summer days or spiced up and warmed through for a chilly night.  And their Prosecco and the Pinot Grigio Blush, rose, are also dreamy sundowners on our warm Suffolk nights.  Closest Adnams shops are Woodbridge and Aldeburgh, who also deliver website orders.

Maple Farm, Kelsale, IP17 2PJ

01728 652000

For twenty years the Kendall’s at Maple Farm have been thoroughly organic. Contented Sheep, cows and chickens roam the meadows, and organic vegetables grow the year round. The farm shop sells their meat, fruit and vegetables, brown eggs with rich yellow yolks, Sophie’s Honey, Fen Farm Dairy products, oils and vinegar, “unusual” coffee (you will have to visit to find out why), jellies and jams made in the kitchen. LABrewery Kombucha (brilliant for the gut) brewed locally at Bentwaters by the Kendalls is available in several tasty and restorative flavours. Most thrilling is their very own home grown and produced, organic milled flour:  wholegrain, spelt, rye. Open every day 9 to 5pm.

Alice Norman – Pinch Meal Kits

Instagram @pinch.suffolk

Alice trained at Ballymaloe in Ireland, and then wandered the world cooking in Amsterdam, Asia and India. She has worked in London’s coolest restaurants Kricket, Clipstone, Emelia and Levan. Now working from the kitchen in Maple Farm, Alice is producing ‘Pinch’ meal kits, pasta focused, using Maple Farm’s glorious organic grain and eggs. Collect only from Maple Farm Kelsale.

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March News

March news from Butley Priory

It’s been a crazy year for so many of us but the owners of the Priory, the Greenwell family, custodians for four generations of the 14th century Priory, are delighted to have taken over and now trade as Butley Priory.

We have kept on the brilliant team, our manager Emma, supported by Nigel, maintenance/gardener/Jack of all trades and Kimmy our housekeeper, and Baz (also a dab hand with the camera in the garden) fine tuning the lawns at the farmhouse, are all working flat out for our open day April 17/18th April, and then to welcome back our brides, grooms and guests.

We’ve spent a year refurbishing Butley Abbey Farmhouse (helped by Georgia Mann Interiors), a 12 bedroom Georgian farmhouse, from top to toe (including the tennis court) which can be used for wedding accommodation, or just a spoiling holiday. We are really pleased with the result; quite challenging in lock down, scouring country sales (hours on line, some disaster purchases) car boot sales (Sunday mornings at Friday Street, our favourite haunt) when we were allowed, good old John Lewis for bathroom and kitchen stuff, and a mad day trip to fabric emporium A.Shufflebothams in Derbyshire made it all happen. The farmhouse has an idyllic rustic, thatched summerhouse in the grounds, also licensed for weddings.  We are very excited, as our first wedding in the gardens using the summerhouse will be Isla and Matt’s 19th June. 

At the Priory, we’ve been super busy these last three months: ancient buttresses have been repaired by master stone mason Kim, it’s a privilege to watch his flint-knapping skills. We’ve replanted the garden with English blooms, lavender, roses, geraniums, alliums and delphiniums, soft pinks, blues and creams. We’ve added some freestanding baths to the already majestic white and cream bedrooms with their enormous arched mullion windows and stone window seats. Not an easy task furnishing a grade one listed Gothic house in a second lock down – hours and hours spent on the Internet searching for the right fabrics and pieces. 

But we are almost ready and open for business. We’ve spruced up the vaulted Priory kitchen (kept the trusty old green aga which keeps it toasty), the four-poster is ready to be assembled, curtains hung, and our interesting collection of rugs rolled out. The tiny, secret vaulted Gin Bar (the former Pilgrims room) with a log fire, hidden behind a door in the panelling is being restocked with speciality gins. Still deliberating what to plant in the terracotta pots for the summer ahead. The snowdrop and wild daffodil woods around the Monks former ponds have been cleared and the bluebells are nearly here.

BRAND NEW!  A WEDDING LIST with SNAPE MALTINGS 
We’ve just set up an exclusive wedding list with Snape Maltings  (stunning Homeware and Furniture) for our bridal couples. To make an enquiry or book a personal appointment for their service, contact retail reception 01728 688303 or email info@snapemaltings.co.uk and visit  https://snapemaltings.co.uk/shops/

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